Posted on 04/27/2014 12:07:12 PM PDT by Kaslin
So are we. Just shocked.
Hey, at least she said it publicly. Thats more than Mr. Bernanke ever did.
Ms. Yellen says doesnt understand why inflation is running hotter in the US than her models say it should be and why it ran cooler in Japan recently than her models predicted.
Models, its always the models with Keynesians.
Many modern economists like to think of themselves as scientists, or at least something close to scientists. But instead of white coats they wear tweed jackets and instead of verifiable results they produce excuses.
Ok thats a bit harsh but its not far from the truth.
Some believe that Yellen is too enamored with a natural rate of unemployment that is too low. That she thinks the rate of unemployment where wages will start to drift up and which represents mostly transitional movement between jobs and not layoffs in the economy is around 5.5%. But others think the natural rate is closer to 7%.
If the natural rate is closer to 7% and the official employment rate is at 6.7% (as the Fed says it is now) then that means there may be serious pressure on prices to move northward long before we get into the 5.5% range. (If we ever do.) This could spur significant upward pressure which in turn will necessitate harsh interest rate moves up in the future to get things under control. (They are never under control. Prices, even strongly manipulated ones are never under control.)
Add that Yellen also said recently that the employment number coming from the Fed wasnt particularly accurate and one can see why brows are furrowed around the table of the FOMC.
Pretty much it all comes back to the fact that the equations which never work for the folks at the Fed are not working yet again.
(From Bloomberg Businessweek)We remain far from having a full understanding of the recent behavior of inflation, wrote the Romers, who are professors of economics at the University of California at Berkeley. Christina Romer is also a former chair of President Barack Obamas Council of Economic Advisers.
Yellen referred to the conundrum in her speech last week. During the recovery, very high levels of slack have seemingly not generated strong downward pressure on inflation, she said. We must therefore watch carefully to see whether diminishing slack is helping return inflation to our objective.
There are a number of possible explanations here. 1 that there isnt as much slack as Ms. Yellen thinks as noted above. 2 that the nature of slack has changed in a somewhat post industrial society with all sorts of welfare state provisions, which was also sort of noted. Add in people hiding in college with loans, the emergence of the Obamacare part-time army, and the Internet DIYers and things dont fit the models conceived even 10 years ago. (Of course they never did.)
And dont forget the ether through which all of these factors move, Quantitative Easing and the complete undermining of the pricing mechanism of capital in the economy. That might make things hard to figure out too.
Read More at Against Crony Capitalism.org
“Employment stabilization” causes price DEstabilization. It’s a dirty scheme to rob one group to buy the votes of another using inflationary macro policies.
Thanks, Keynesian scholars!
Food and Energy are not part of the index for inflation; those two categories alone are running 10% higher every year... Working fewer hours... Government cutting back your welfare... Everyone has less - Obama has both printed more money (buying stocks via the Fed), and made everyone working poorer!
I don't think very many are doing it. I thing the offshoring stills swamps the reshoring. The only reshoring I've heard about is where the company is returning with very highly automated factories so that labor cost is no longer an issue, as there is very little.
I'd rather have highly automated factories in the U.S. than have them overseas and foreign owned. But to help the labor situation we need to reshore industries that still need some labor. That's going to take restoring the tariffs.
The most recent reshoring I've heard about, appeared to have simply relocated a plant to Mexico to eliminate the union, and then relocated again to the U.S. with ultra high automation. I don't want to prevent automation. It's coming. And it's going to cause massive labor dislocations. All the more reason to get as many jobs back as we can now.
All that’s true, and so is the fact that limey poofter Keynes was wrong about everything.
If Kamarade Franklin Delano Rooseveltovich had gone with sane economists instead of the pickle-smoocher from Piccadilly, there need have been no Great Depression.
“Any working stiff buying food and gasoline know that inflation has been surging over the last two years while our earning power has stayed stationary or has fallen.”
I have observed that continuously since my return to the States in 2006.
“Socialists/Communists have no idea how economics work.... because their understanding of basic human nature is wrong.”
Terse, concise...I’m going to steal it, replace Socialist/Communists with “Leftards,” and replace the four periods with a comma.
Maybe he feels guilty at how he treated his grandmother before she died.
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